Posted on 09/09/2010 10:45:07 PM PDT by paudio
Fred Fox Jr. inadvertently helped create one of the most infamous TV phrases of all time when he wrote the Happy Days episode "Hollywood 3." That phrase, since used thousands of times to describe dozens of TV shows that went from good to bad, is "jump the shark."
Wikipedia has this to say about it: "Jumping the shark is an idiom used to describe the moment of downturn for a previously successful enterprise. The phrase was originally used to denote the point in a television program's history where the plot spins off into absurd storylines or unlikely characterizations. These changes were often the result of efforts to revive interest in a show whose audience had begun to decline, usually through the employment of different actors, writers or producers."
It comes from the episode in which Fonzie went to Hollywood and had to jump a shark -- on water skis, not his motorcycle -- in order to defeat a local rival for, well, some important reason at the time. It's generally considered the point when Happy Days went from a must-watch show to a can't-watch show.
(Excerpt) Read more at blastr.com ...
The “jump the shark” moment for the 1970s era show “What’s Happening” has to be when the main characters went to a Doobie Brothers concert and Re-Run was caught by the band taping the show (on some really cheesy Radio Shack cassette recorder). The Doobie Brothers then proceeded to lecture the entire cast on the evils of taping a concert - as if there was this huge black market out there for bootleg live versions of such dreck as “Taking It To The Streets.”
“Or when they did it after major characters actually hooked up, thus eliminating sexual tension in a show.”
Like Mr. C and Joanie. Or Bert & Ernie.
“Lost in Space” is a perfect example of early shark-jumping.
HEY!
Brady Bunch
Partridge Family
Any show
We know, you don’t like TV. There was a we hate Frantzie show and that was too much to bear.
Point well made.
So...he's got that going for him also.
The show really jumped the hark when Fonzie stopped wearing white T-shirts and started wearing black T-shirts instead.
I don't know why...but that really sounds Racist to me!
Boy, you nailed it. Poor old Jonathan Harris started off playing Dr. Smith as a mysterious, evil, maybe-straight, Clifton Webb type, only to devolve into a prancing, quivering, Frank Pangborn type of buffoon.
Harris was capable of so much more. Shame we got to see so little of it.
Well, at least we'll always have (the original) Battlestar Gallactica! :)
BLOW IT OUT YOUR NOSE WITH A RUBBER HOSE!
Welcome back to the 70’s
Are you a Sweathog? ;0)
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